4.2 Article

Evaluating Temporal Variability in Bacterial Indicator Samples for an Urban Watershed

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING-ASCE
Volume 135, Issue 12, Pages 1294-1303

Publisher

ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)EE.1943-7870.0000104

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Funding

  1. 3 RWW
  2. WaterQUEST at Carnegie Mellon University

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Temporal variability in water quality sampling can lead to under or overestimation of pollution. More frequent sampling during times of expected high variability can reduce temporal bias. However, bacterial indicator measurements require manual sampling and time-intensive and expensive laboratory analysis. Thus, methods to assess the effect of temporal variability would be useful. In this work, fecal coliform and E. coli samples were taken weekly during the recreational season at 25 sites in an urban watershed. The data were categorized into wet versus dry days, and upper versus lower watershed, and the geometric means and geometric standard deviations of various five-sample data sets were analyzed to determine if sample data selection would result in different stream classifications. Results indicate if the bacterial indicator samples are near the regulated limits for water contact recreational use, temporal bias could sway impairment classification decisions. To reduce the temporal bias, sampling data submitted for stream classification should include several sampling groups within the recreational season, particularly for sites near point sources of pollution or with low fecal indicator contamination.

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